centaur
See also: Centaur
English

A bronze statue of a centaur
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Latin centaurus, from Ancient Greek κένταυρος (kéntauros), from Κένταυρος (Kéntauros, “a member of a savage race from Thessaly”).
Pronunciation
Noun
centaur (plural centaurs)
- (Greek mythology) A mythical beast having a horse's body with a man's head and torso in place of the head and neck of the horse.
- Synonym: hippocentaur
- (astronomy, also capitalised) An icy planetoid that orbits the Sun between Jupiter and Neptune.
- (chess) A chess-playing team comprising a human player and a computer who work together.
- 2018, James Bridle, New Dark Age: Technology, Knowledge and the End of the Future, Verso Books, →ISBN, page 159:
- This was not Kasparov's approach. Instead of rejecting the machines, he returned the year after his defeat to Deep Blue with a different kind of chess, which he called ‘Advanced Chess’. Other names for Advanced Chess include ‘cyborg’ and ‘centaur’ chess.
- (by extension, artificial intelligence) A human and an AI who work together.
- 2023 November 11, John Burn-Murdoch, “Generative AI and white-collar jobs: reasons to be wary”, in FT Weekend, The FT View, page 8:
- The first—termed “cyborgs” by the authors—intertwined with the AI, moulding, checking and refining its responses, while the second—“centaurs”—divided labour, handing off more AI-suited subtasks while focussing on their own areas of expertise.
- 2023 November 13, James Somers, “A Coder Considers the Waning Days of the Craft”, in The New Yorker, →ISSN:
- Programming has not yet gone the way of chess. But the centaurs have arrived. GPT-4 on its own is, for the moment, a worse programmer than I am. Ben is much worse. But Ben plus GPT-4 is a dangerous thing.
Derived terms
- centaurial, centaurian, centauric, centauroid
- centauress, centaurette
- ichthyocentaur
- onocentaur
Translations
mythical half-man, half-horse
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Further reading
Centaur (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Dutch
Alternative forms
Etymology
Ultimately from Latin centaurus, from Ancient Greek κένταυρος (kéntauros).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsɛnˌtɑu̯ər/, /ˈkɛnˌtɑu̯ər/
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: cen‧taur
Polish

centaur
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈt͡sɛn.tawr/
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -ɛntawr
- Syllabification: cen‧taur
- Homophone: Centaur
Declension
Romanian
Declension
Declension of centaur
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